July lending makes up for poor June figures

July 2012

The latest Mortgage Monitor from e.surv chartered surveyors has reported a 12% increase in house purchase loans, to 49,561.

The firm said that strong monthly increase in July reflects weak lending in June, when purchase approvals fell by 12% compared to May, rather than of a recovery in lending.

House purchase loans in July were 2% lower than in May, and on an annual basis were 1% lower than in July 2011.

With the economy stalling, the costs of funding a mortgage increasing, and the availability of credit drying up, banks are focusing on sustaining lending to borrowers with higher levels of equity and tightening criteria on high loan-to-value mortgages.

This trend became more pronounced in July, when two-thirds of all house purchase loans in July were to borrowers with a deposit of 25% or more. There were just 4,708 new mortgages granted to borrowers with deposits of less than 15%. This represented less than one in ten of all loans in July, the lowest proportion since July last year.

First time buyer numbers fell last month. There were just 11,399 loans for purchase of property worth up to £125,000. This is 6% lower than the average so far this year of 12,111, and is 1% lower than July last year.

House purchase loans for property worth over £500,000 rose 15%, and loans for purchases over £750,000 rose by 17%, reflecting the disproportionate share of the market held by wealthier buyers.

The quarterly average loan-to-value fell below 60% for the first time since the third quarter of last year.

“The surge in July should certainly be taken with a pinch of salt. It was an exceptionally weak June by historic standards, thanks mainly to all the Jubilee holidays,” said Richard Sexton, business development director of e.surv.

“Lending rose in July because the market was making up for all the time lost in June, rather than because it is becoming easier to get a mortgage. It doesn’t hide the two-tier nature of the mortgage market, with equity-rich borrowers dominating activity while many first-time buyers are locked out by banks lack of appetite for high loan-to-value lending. While credit is so scarce, banks would rather focus on sustaining lending to wealthier borrowers and buy-to-let landlords.

“The mortgage market has a long way to go before it climbs out the deep hole dug by the chronic lack of first-time buyer loans and the constraints of tough lending criteria. But escape from that hole looks a long way off. The economy is contracting and the eurozone crisis could still bubble over at any point, meaning banks won’t begin increasing their lending to first time buyers anytime soon.”

Exit mobile version